What Scores do You Need to Avoid Being Chopped?

What Scores Do You Need to Get Into College?

As we discussed in my previous guide, how colleges use SAT and ACT scores, getting high scores isn’t about getting into college – it’s about getting your application read in the first place.

But how, exactly, do you figure out whether or not your particular scores are high enough to get you into your target schools?

Once you have an accurate idea of how this all works, it’ll make your goals much clearer (and it might put a little bit of fire in your belly, too).

The 25-75 System

When you look up the average SAT scores for any particular school, you’ll see the scores presented like this:

Columbia University:

Test Scores — 25th / 75th Percentile

SAT Verbal: 690 / 780

SAT Math: 700 / 790

ACT Composite: 31 / 34

ACT English: 32 / 35

ACT Math: 29 / 35

What’s up with the two numbers and the slash? Shouldn’t they just show an average?

Fortunately for you, colleges DON’T release “averages” of their entering class’ SAT and ACT scores – they publish their 25/75 range instead. Take a look at Columbia’s SAT Math scores. Here’s what they mean:

-Only 25% of students who gain admission to Columbia score below a 700 on their math section.

-Only 25% of students who gain admission to Columbia score above a 790 on their math section.

-50% of students who gain admission to Columbia score between a 700 and a 790 on their math section.

These numbers are incredibly helpful because they give you a range. Rather than giving you one meaningless number, they provide you with a target to shoot for.

For any school’s 25-75 range:

Any score BELOW the 25% range will probably keep your application from getting looked at unless you are a “special case” (recruited athlete, huge donor, sought-after minority, or any other student with an inside “liaison”).

Any score INSIDE the 25-75% range will get your application READ and LOOKED AT. It won’t automatically get you in, but it will let the admissions committee open your folder, learn more about you, and see whether you’re the right fit for the college.

Any score ABOVE the 75% range will not only get your application opened, but will actually be used as an EXTRA ADVANTAGE to pull you in. After all, if you have scores higher than the 75% range, your score will raise the school’s average entering SAT or ACT scores, which is amazing for the school’s ranking.

As you can see, for a hyper-competitive school like Columbia, it’s extremely difficult to have score ABOVE the 75% range. When applying to an Ivy, it’s pretty tough to out-score 75% of all the admitted applicants (and there’s not much room to do it). Because getting accepted to Columbia is so hard in the first place, having 700+ scores on each section isn’t even an advantage – it’s just a requirement.

What about an equally awesome, but less competitive, school such as USC?

Test Scores — 25th / 75th Percentile

SAT Verbal: 610 / 720

SAT Math: 670 / 770

As you can see here, both the 25% and the 75% score ranges are significantly lower than that of Columbia.

This means that if you apply to USC with a 780 in your math and combined reading & writing+language sections, you’ll not only get your application read, but you will have a little “bonus feature” on your application that’ll increase your pull with the admissions committee.

To get your application read, you’ll need at least a 1280 – the bottom sum of the two 25% ranges. Higher would be better.

Anything between a 1280 and a 1490 will get you looked at and considered. You’ll probably have to have a slightly stronger application when you enter stage three, but you’ll still get looked at, which is what really matters. SAT and ACT scores get you looked at. That is all. They don’t get you into a school automatically, but if your scores aren’t high enough, then the school won’t really look at your application at all. They don’t get you in – they prevent you from getting rejected.

Looking up these score ranges for your target schools is essential. Here’s how you can define the following three categories of college:

Safety Schools are schools where your SAT or ACT scores are ABOVE the 75% threshold. If they’re not above there, then these schools aren’t “safe” at all.

50/50 Schools are schools at which your scores are IN THE MIDDLE of the 25-75% range. You’re not guaranteed to get in or get rejected, and it all depends on your application. You are, in effect, a 50/50 chance.

Reach Schools are schools at which your scores are AT THE BOTTOM or SLIGHTLY BELOW the 25% range. I’m not saying you can’t get into a school just because you’re 100 points below the 25% cutoff – I am saying that there’s a slim chance of it happening, and, hence, you are a reach.

Hundreds of other factors affect college admissions (grades being the big one), but scores are huge. They’re the shortcut colleges use to decide whether or not to read or throw away your application. Understanding what you’re shooting for will help you select some targets.

How to Set Your Target

Now that you know how colleges treat SAT and ACT scores, it’s time to set a goal. Studying without a goal is like working a job without getting a paycheck – not very inspiring. Once you really start to imagine the colleges you’re aiming for, you’ll become more motivated and inspired, and this whole process will become much more “real” to you.

Click on the 1st or 2nd result, which will always be a collegeapps.about.com link.

Scroll down to find the score ranges.

Just remember to ignore the SAT Writing scores, and to treat the SAT Critical Reading scores as the sum total of the new reading and writing+language scores.

About.com has amazing, very up-to-date score data on every college you’ve ever heard of. This is a fantastic resource, and it makes the process very easy.

You might be surprised – some schools with “big names” have somewhat lax score requirements. Some “safety schools” require 700+ in every section. In general, considering how insanely competitive the college game is these days, expect higher score requirements no matter where you happen to be applying.

What to Do Now

Once you’ve completed the steps above, you’ll have a good idea of exactly what scores you need to get your application reviewed. Now we enter stage two: getting your scores up to par.